524 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
524 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
(Asbury Park Press, Thursday, April 7, 1994)
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ALTAR EGOS
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by Janine De Fao
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(Press Freehold Bureau)
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Modern-day witches are looking for respect and understanding of
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their religion.
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In a darkened room filled with the musky scent of incense, 10
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figures file into a circle lit by the orange flame of a solitary candle.
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A young woman in a flowing skirt, her hair loose about her
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shoulders, holds a small dagger between her palms. Dipping it three
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times into a small dish, she calls on the spirits of water to "cast out
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fear, uncollected thoughts, unhappiness."
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Adding salt to the water, the priestess then asks for "strength,
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courage and order in building this sacred temple" to the goddesses
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and gods of ancient myth whom she will invoke.
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"Salt joins to water, as man joins to woman, as we would all join to
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the universe," she intones.
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"Blessed be," the worshipers respond.
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She paces round the circle three times, wand in hand, casting a
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sacred space somewhere between the realm of man and the realm of
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the gods.
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Arms outstretched, the group turns to the east, inviting the element
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of air, "winds of learning, winds of beginning, winds of change."
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Facing south, they call on fire, element of heat, passion, desire. To
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the west, water -- "you of rivers and waves, you who quench our
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thirst" -- is summoned. And to the north, "she who gives all life",
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earth, is asked to join the circle.
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Repeating the words of the priestess, the reverent chant:
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"I am air. I am fire. I am water. I am all things. All things are me.
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"I am the goddess' perfect child.
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"I am free."
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On the bright night of a new moon, this group of college students,
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doctoral candidates, a marketing project manager, an animation
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artist, a shopkeeper, a mother and a machinist have gathered in the
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cozy living room of a farmhouse cottage in Somerset County. But
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they could be meeting in a forest or field, a student apartment or a
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comfortable suburban home.
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They wear street clothes, the only similarity among them the five-
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pointed star in a circle hanging from their necks. But they could be
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dressed in long ceremonial robes or "skyclad," wearing nothing at
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all.
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They have come to celebrate a religion misunderstood by many,
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unknown to many more.
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It goes by various names: Wicca, the Old Religion, Nature
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Spirituality, Goddess Worship, Neopaganism, the Craft, Witchcraft.
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Drawn by the concepts of a female deity, a reconnection with the
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Earth and an emphasis on spirituality and personal participation,
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thousands of Americans have joined Wicca since it first appeared in
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this country in the 1960s.
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But its roots reach far deeper, its followers say, back to the
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agricultural societies of pre-Christian Europe where "witches" were
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"wise ones", the village healers and midwives, and "pagan" meant
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simply "country dweller".
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In those simpler times, survival meant following the cycle of the
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seasons. And worshiping Mother Earth, doing folk magic to make
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the crops grow or the rain fall, was as essential to everyday life as
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planting and harvesting.
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Whether those worship rituals were passed down through the ages -
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- surviving the Inquisition and other Church efforts to eradicate
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"false" religions -- or whether they have been re-created in modern
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times is a subject of heated debate among witches today.
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But it is that relationship with the Earth, and with divinity, that they
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seek through reclaiming the myths of old Britain, ancient Rome
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and Greece and even Egypt.
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"In the high-tech society we live in, (Wicca) speaks to a deep
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human need to reconnect with the Earth," explained Norm Vogel, a
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Bound Brook witch.
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REJECT SATANISM
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At a time when the word still conjures up images of pointy hats and
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noses, of black cats and brooms, and of wicked spells and devil
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worship, today's witches can sometimes explain what they aren't
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more easily than what they are.
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Foremost, they insist they are not Satanists.
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"We don't have anyone in our religious belief that represents evil,"
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said "Prytan," a Barnegat man who asked to be identified only by
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his Craft name because he fears discrimination at work. "Satan is a
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Christian concept...It would be impossible for us to have a concept
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such as Satan simply because it didn't happen until Wicca was
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already an established belief."
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The negative stereotypes about witches were created with the
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establishment of a dominant Catholic Church, which sought to
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demonize the pagan religions to gain converts, members say. Those
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misconceptions have been perpetuated by fundamentalist preachers
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and sensationalist media, they say.
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"It's very ingrained, when you consider what everybody knows
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about witches they've learned from fairy tales, cartoons or watching
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Samantha on TV (on "Bewitched"). Absolutely everything anyone
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has ever seen or heard or read about witchcraft is wrong. People
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don't have a chance to be exposed to it," Prytan said.
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So what is witchcraft truly about?
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It often depends on whom you ask. As a religion that centers on
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individual belief, on experience rather than dogma, its members are
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quick to point out that there is no one standard set of beliefs or
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rituals. (The partial ritual described above is from Blue Star, one of
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many Wiccan traditions.)
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"What this religion focuses on more than anything else is going
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through (the) rituals until you make a connection with deity. Action
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and participation come before belief...When I run circles, I can
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really feel it -- it's a divine experience," explained Sabrina Chase, a
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doctoral candidate in anthropology at Rutgers.
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But while they are hesitant to speak for all Wiccans, most members
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agree to a basic set of tenets.
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They worship a goddess and a god, in some cases multiple
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goddesses and gods, as the creators of all things.
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"I really didn't see a point to not having a female represented in the
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Christian concept of deity. There's male and female in everything, in
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all forms of life. The balance (in Wicca) struck me as more
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harmonious," Prytan said.
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Wiccans hold nature and the elements sacred and seek to attune
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their lives to the cycle of the seasons, worshipping at half moons
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and full moons and celebrating their holidays at the solstices and
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equinoxes and midpoints between them.
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The pentagram witches wear -- a circle surrounding a five-pointed
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star -- represents the elements and the spirit. The pentagram is
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sometimes mistaken for a Satanic symbol because Satanists have
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adopted it and inverted it, much as they use an inverted cross as a
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symbol.
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Spirituality permeates Wiccans' everyday lives, in which they
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recognize divinity in animals and plants and each other.
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"Wicca is a religion that celebrates life. You're taught that you're an
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integral part of the Earth Mother. You are necessary for her
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survival just as she is necessary for your survival," said Susan
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Carberry, who opened a Craft store, Equinox Books and Curios, in
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Long Branch last April.
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Wiccans believe firmly that they are responsible for their own
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actions. Without a figure representing evil, there is no scapegoat of
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"the devil made me do it." That acceptance of personal
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responsibility is tied to their belief in reincarnation.
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It is also connected to the Wiccan Rede, "And harm none, do what
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you will."
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Many Wiccans also believe in the Law of Three, that any action
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they take will come back to them threefold, often used as an
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explanation why Wiccans would not use magic to harm another. In
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addition, they do not proselytize.
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"I think if the general public would learn that we have a code of
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ethics, that we wish to do no harm to people or to nature....there'd
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be a lot more understanding. But the 'witch' word and the 'pagan'
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word and the 'magic' word set off people's alarm systems," said
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Selena Fox, who runs a Pagan network outside Madison, Wis.
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A GROWING MOVEMENT
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But those words are becoming less alarming to some as Wicca
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grows and people learn more about the nature religion.
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"In 20 years, (membership) has at least quadrupled," said Fox,
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director of Circle Network and Circle Sanctuary, a legally
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recognized Wiccan church and nature preserve.
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Much of that growth is attributed to Margot Adler's "Drawing
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Down the Moon" and Starhawk's "Spiral Dance," two influential
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books on the Craft published in 1979. Witches say those books
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inspired many to begin practicing Wicca alone or to seek out a
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coven, or group.
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No definitive membership numbers exist, as any national structures
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are loose and many witches don't belong to groups, but Fox and the
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unfinished Pagan Census Project put the number between one-
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quarter and one-half million Neopagans in the United States.
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Wiccans are a large subset of that group.
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Estimates of Wiccans in New Jersey range from 500 to more than
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1,000, local witches said.
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While the majority of witches are women, some 40 percent
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nationally are thought to be men, Fox said. As many as 70 percent
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may be former Christians, she said.
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Mark Speeney is one such witch.
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The soft-spoken, 30-year-old Rutgers anthropology doctoral
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candidate and South Jersey native was "a devout Catholic as a kid."
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When Speeney was 10, his father died, sending him into a faith
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crisis in which he began to question "everything (he) was taught
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about religion."
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A short time later, he found a copy of "The ABCs of Witchcraft"
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and "it made sense to me," he said.
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"It's kind of like something I've almost been looking for my whole
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life.
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"I think I always had an envy of the religious orders, of priests and
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nuns, who seemed to have a closer connection to the divine," he
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said.
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In Wicca, he explained, there are no intermediaries to the goddess
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and god. Every man is a priest and every woman a priestess.
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"When I get initiated, I can apply for ministerial credentials. I can
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marry people and preside over other rites of passage...I could say,
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'Well, Mom, you finally got your wish. I'm a priest.' "
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Like Speeney and many Wiccans, "Windrider" also found her way
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to Wicca, at least in part, through books.
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After several experiences with Wiccans, psychic dreams and
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healings, Windrider pulled out a copy of "Spiral Dance" that she
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had been given five years earlier.
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"It was almost as if someone put words to my feelings," said the
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resident of a Monmouth County shore town, where she lives with
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seven other Neopagans in a communal home, one of 11 such
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arrangements she knows of on the shore. Windrider asked to be
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identified by her Craft name because she and her housemates fear
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job discrimination and worry that their home could be targeted.
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In the five years they have lived there, the communal home has
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become a place where people come for emotional and physical
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healing, Windrider said.
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'FOCUSING THE WILL'
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Most Wiccans do some type of magic or spells, healing magic being
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the type most often cited.
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Whether chanting or dancing in groups, or lighting a certain color
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candle and mixing herbs when alone, the witches seek to raise
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energy and direct it for a purpose -- for healing, protection, to ease
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childbirth, or even for money or a new job.
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Wiccans say they have no more power than anyone else. They
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simply learn how to use it. And while they admit that some may use
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magic against others, most witches say they believe anything they
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do will come back to them.
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"People are often upset about Wiccan magic. Wiccan magic is
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about focusing the will, the mind...It's no different from saying a
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rosary and trying to focus it on something," Windrider said.
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Said Speeney, "Miracles are real to (my Catholic mother) but
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there's no such thing as magic. To me, miracles and magic are the
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same thing.
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"Wicca is very poetic -- the poetry of believing that there's
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something like magic in the world and you can experience it," he
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said. "I'm also aware of the little things, that there's magic in every
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sunrise and every sunset and poetry in seeing the full face of the
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moon. I acknowledge that I'm part of everything that happens."
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Said Carberry, the Craft shop owner, "It's more of a philosophy of
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life than a religion in the traditional sense."
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Back in the circle, the Witches have made their new moon vows for
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the lunar cycle, with promises ranging from taking a walk each day
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to writing letters to avoiding chocolate. Kneeling one-by-one before
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burning incense, they recite their pledges and bind them, tying a
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knot in the air.
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The ritual is more personal than rote, serious but not solemn,
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infused with mirth and laughter.
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The group of friends then sits casually discussing the ritual and
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sharing news of their lives since they've last met.
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When they are finished, they rise to bless the wine and cakes in the
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Sacred Marriage.
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Standing before the kneeling priestess, the priest draws his athame,
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a small knife, and says, "Be it known that a man is no greater than a
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woman..."
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"Nor is a woman greater than a man..." she replies, offering a wine-
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filled chalice.
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"For what one lacks, the other can give," they say together.
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"As the athame is to the male..."
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"So the chalice is to the female..."
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"And when they are joined they become one in truth," all join in as
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the athame is lowered into the chalice, "for there is no greater
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magic in all the world than love."
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MANY WITCHES STILL IN (BROOM) CLOSET
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While many witches agree that being more open about their beliefs
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and practices would help dispel some of the myths about their
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religion, some say "coming out of the broom closet" is a risky
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undertaking.
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Many people "don't realize it's a serious religion, and a highly
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responsible one at that. A lot of the secrecy in the Craft today is
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hurting us," said Norm Vogel, who directs the New Jersey chapters
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of the Witches' Anti-Discrimination Lobby and Witches Against
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Religious Discrimination out of his Bound Brook home.
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But for some, being more open about their faith opens them up to
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discrimination from their family, friends, neighbors, and employers.
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The horror stories abound. People have lost their children, their
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jobs, their homes and their businesses, despite the fact that religious
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freedom is guaranteed in the Constitution and Wicca -- as their
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belief is most commonly known -- is a legally recognized religion.
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The Mississippi woman fired from her jog in the late '80s when her
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boss learned she was a witch. The Georgia college student whose
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shrine was confiscated from her dorm room. The Arkansas couple
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whose Craft store was driven out of town by local preachers. The
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Florida group whose neighbors shot at them during a backyard
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ritual.
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Many who oppose them refuse to believe Wiccans don't worship
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Satan, despite what they say.
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"What they are doing is promoting witchcraft, which is evil. Read
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your Bible," said Gary Taylor, a Christian minister in Jonesboro,
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Ark., who was instrumental in keeping a Craft store out of his
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town.
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"They're worshipping Wicca god and Wicca goddess. There's only
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one God, and that's the God in heaven," Taylor told a New York
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talk show audience. "Witchcraft, Satanism, New Age -- they're all
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under the same umbrella."
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Some say the Northeast is more tolerant; others just that
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discrimination is more subtle.
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"I know they can't fire me because of (my religion), but it would be
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difficult for me to prove that I didn't get a promotion or something
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along those lines based on it. So I figure the less the people in
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charge know about it, the better," said Prytan, a Barnegat witch
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who asked to be identified by his Craft name because he fears
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discrimination in his job.
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Susan Carberry, who opened a Craft store in Long Branch last
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April, said she has had few problems. But on occasion, people stand
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outside her Brighton Avenue shop and try to dissuade customers
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from entering.
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And Vogel had his "first acquaintance with public bigotry" when he
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was invited by Ocean City to speak about Wicca on Halloween in
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1991, and later had the invitation withdrawn when local ministers
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protested he was "bringing Satan to town" and could influence
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children, he said.
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Rev. Darryl Duer, associate pastor of St. Peter's United Methodist
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Church in Ocean City, was one of the ministers who objected to
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Vogel's appearance.
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While Duer said he realizes a number of good people are Wiccans,
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"where I begin to get wary of it is that there seem to be a large
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number of Wiccans who attend occult shows giving these young
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people ideas about amulets, potions and certain things they can do
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to affect fate...
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"The core of (Wicca) is rooted in a falsehood: that you can control
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what happens to you," Duer said. "The central issue of the Christian
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experience is that we are not in control. God is in control."
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The Catholic Church takes an even stronger position on witchcraft,
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condemning it as superstition that is contrary to the teachings of the
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Church and the Bible, said Joseph M. Donadieu, spokesman for the
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Diocese of Trenton.
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"One who believes in and practices witchcraft is putting one's faith
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somewhere else in this world, in objects and spirits" rather than in
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God, Donadieu said.
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-- Janine De Fao
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================================================
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(Asbury Park Press, Tuesday, April 26, 1994)
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BRICK SEX CASE LEADS TO ARREST OF 'SORCERER'
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Authorities accuse a man involved in witchcraft of inducing teen-
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age girls to become his victims.
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by William K. Heine
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Press Toms River Bureau
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TOMS RIVER -- A New York man described by authorities as a
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sorcerer who uses witchcraft to lure young women is being held on
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charges he had sex with two 15-year-olds in Brick Township last
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year.
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Carl S. Truchel, 47, faces 15 charges of criminal sexual conduct,
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sexual assault, criminal sexual assault and endangering the welfare
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of a child. The assaults all happened in Brick between April 18 and
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June 19, 1993, according to the complaints.
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Truchel, of Queens, used his affiliation with the Wicca religion to
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attract the girls, a law enforcement source said. State police and the
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Ocean County prosecutor's office are investigating whether there
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are more than just the two victims, the source said.
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"It's the type of approach he's using to attract young women to
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follow his teachings, his beliefs," the source said. "It's alleged he
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engaged them in sexual activity."
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Truchel also claims to be a full-blooded Comanche Indian chief.
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Truchel has been the subject of numerous articles in Long Island
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newspapers about Indian artifacts and culture. He calls himself
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Chief Strong Sun and describes himself as an actor, a stunt man, an
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archaeologist and an Indian rights activist.
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State police arrested Truchel Saturday morning at the Point
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Pleasant Beach train station. A warrant for his arrest was issued
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Jan. 26.
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Assistant Prosecutor Deborah Hanlon-Schron said she did not
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know why Truchel was in Point Pleasant Beach nor did she know
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what his connection with Brick was a year ago.
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Truchel appeared in an Asbury Park Press story last May about a
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swan that had been killed at Godfrey Lake in the Herbertsville
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section of Brick. Truchel found the swan, which had a reputation as
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being aggressive toward humans, in its nest with its neck broken.
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The story identified Truchel as a Long Island resident who was
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staying with a woman on Godfrey Lake Drive. Sources yesterday
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said he was staying with his girlfriend.
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Truchel told the Press then that he used to visit the lake to feed the
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swans.
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Truchel claims to be self-employed and told authorities he owns the
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Chief Strong Sun Trading Post on Route 209 in Marshall Creek,
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Pa. Hanlon-Schron said she did not know whether he had actually
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opened the business yet.
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She declined to comment on whether authorities suspect more than
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the two victims.
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Truchel was being held last night in Ocean County Jail, Toms Rive,
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in lieu of $100,000 bail set by Superior Court Judge Peter J.
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Giovine.
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Wicca is a legally recognized religion that goes by various names as
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a subset for Neopaganism: the Old Religion, Nature Spirituality,
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Goddess Worship, the Craft and Witchcraft.
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Thousands of Americans have joined Wicca since it first appeared
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in the United States in the 1960s, drawn by the concept of a female
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deity, a reconnection with the earth and an emphasis on spirituality
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and personal participation.
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Wiccans hold nature and the elements sacred and seek to attune
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their lives to the cycle of the seasons, worshipping at half moons
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and full moons and celebrating their holidays at the solstices and
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equinoxes and midpoints between them.
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Wiccans also believe firmly that they are responsible for their own
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actions.
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No definitive membership numbers exist. The unfinished Pagan
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Census Project put the number between one-quarter million and
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one-half million Neopagans in the United States. Wiccans are a
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large subset of that group. Estimates of Wiccans in New Jersey
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range from 500 to more than 1,000.
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The majority of witches are women, but about 40 percent nationally
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are thought to be men, said Selena Fox, director of Circle Network
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and Circle Sanctuary, a legally recognized Wiccan church and
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nature preserve in Madison, Wis.
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Local sources within the Wicca religion said yesterday they do not
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condone taking advantage of others, said Lady Shannon, a member
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of a Monmouth County Wicca group who identified herself only
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with her Wicca name.
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